“Many Hands Make Light Work” – Ancient Greek Proverb. “Raise Your Hands To Help Your People First!” – Frank A Hilario
A good friend, Wilfrido Villarama, points out to me the preoccupations of today, people looking for government’s “community-action initiatives” such as Community Engagement, Solidarity, And Citizenship (book authored by Jalton C Taguibao, cover shown above). In those 3 broad concepts, something huge is missing! Guess what?
Now, what does the book contain? In its website, of both original
& updated versions, both undated (main.vibalgroup.com),
publisher Vibal repeatedly says:
This book focuses on
the application of ideas and methods of the social sciences to examine
challenges of contemporary community life. It focuses on community-action
initiatives such as community engagement, solidarity, and citizenship as guided
by the core values of human rights, social justice, empowerment and advocacy,
gender equality, and participatory development. It enhances students’ sense of
shared identity and willingness to contribute to the pursuit of the common
good.
Excellent cover, excellent summary! Calling Filipino citizens
to contribute to the pursuit of the common good by watching out for “human
rights, social justice, empowerment and advocacy, gender equality, and
participatory development.”
Where
are the people helping themselves first? Essentially, the Taguibao book calls for
citizens to be “watchdogs” – but not call for citizens to be “workdogs.”
Too many watchdogs, no workdogs! For instance, the Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) was
founded on 25 October 1953, or 69 years ago, by Catholics (Wikipedia, en.wikipedia.org).
What has the FFF done for the common good except complain?
No, Mr Taguibao is not calling for workdogs, as I put
it – those watchdogs of ours, as exemplified by the FFF, exist for the purpose
of criticizing the government, which is every citizen’s right – but they have not
pursued any community development project right where they are!
Those citizen groups do not
help themselves in pursuit of the growth of their communities according to
their best of lights. That is what is missing in “Community Participation.”
Even the American National
Democratic Institute (NDI), as pointed out to me by my friend, does not
have the right frame of mind. It says in its own website (ndi.org):
Ensuring that
government actually works for the public good requires informed, organized,
active and peaceful citizen participation. Citizens must, therefore… [develop]
the skills to voice their concerns, act collectively and hold public officials…
Even
the American NDI has only half of the equation! Citizens must be helping
themselves first before yelping against the government. Community participation
works in 2 ways: people complaining and people helping themselves.
And so, without naming names, we are calling on
non-government organizations (NGOs), community and civic groups, to think hard
of how they can help their members and the community at large – with or without
government assistance. You cannot complain against inaction if you have not
done any action to help yourself first!
“Nilalahat
ko ang mga NGOs – puede ba, hindi puro ngawa, walang ginagawa!” I am addressing
all NGOs – help the people first before you complain for them! Labor for your
community enough first before you lambast the government for not doing enough!@517
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